Eagle Nest Removal Take Permits
Eagle Nest Protections
Along with protecting eagles, the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act also protects eagle nests. Eagle nests are protected at all times, not just when the nests are in use by eagles. This means eagle nests can never be removed, destroyed, moved, tampered with, or obstructed, no matter what time of year it is, without a permit.
An eagle nest is defined as "any assemblage of materials built, maintained, or used by bald eagles or golden eagles for the purpose of reproduction. An eagle nest remains an eagle nest until it becomes so diminished, or the nest substrate upon which it is built fails, that the nest is no longer usable and is not likely to become usable to eagles, as determined by a Federal, Tribal, or State eagle biologist" (50 CFR 22.6).
The following are all considered eagle nests and are protected (unless the nests are determined by a Federal, Tribal, or State eagle biologist to no longer be usable):
- Any nest constructed by an eagle, even if the nest is never finished or used.
- A nest built by another bird that is subsequently used by an eagle for reproduction.
- A nest constructed by an eagle that is subsequently used by another species, such as owls or osprey.
Note that removal of an eagle nest may cause loss of breeding productivity for the eagle pair, which is a form of disturbance take. If nest take removes all available nesting substrate from an eagle pair's territory, this can lead to abandonment and loss of the eagle territory, which constitutes another form of disturbance take.